Anthropic has just announced Project Glasswing, and if you work in cybersecurity, healthcare IT, or digital health, this one deserves your full attention...
Project Glasswing is a coalition of some of the world's largest technology companies, Amazon Web Services, Apple, Broadcom, Cisco, CrowdStrike, Google, JPMorganChase, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Palo Alto Networks, formed specifically to address what Anthropic describes as an inflection point in AI-powered cybersecurity.
At the centre of it is Claude Mythos Preview, an unreleased frontier AI model that Anthropic says has already identified thousands of previously unknown (zero-day) critical vulnerabilities, in every major operating system, every major web browser, and a range of other critical software infrastructure.
The model found many of these vulnerabilities autonomously, without human guidance, including flaws that had survived decades of human security review and millions of automated tests.
For years, finding serious software vulnerabilities required deep expertise held by a small number of skilled security researchers. That expertise barrier is about to disappear.
AI models can now read, reason about, and exploit code at a level that approaches, or in some cases surpasses, the best human security researchers. The cost and effort required to find and exploit vulnerabilities are dropping dramatically.
Anthropic is being explicit about the dual-use nature of this: the same capabilities that make Mythos Preview valuable for defenders make it dangerous in the wrong hands. If capabilities like these proliferate to nation-state actors, criminal groups, or even script kiddies, the consequences for critical infrastructure could be severe.
The Project Glasswing coalition is an attempt to use these capabilities for defence before that proliferation happens. Anthropic is committing $100M in usage credits for Mythos Preview across partner organisations, plus $4M in direct donations to open-source security organisations.
The healthcare sector sits at the intersection of every risk factor this development highlights:
Project Glasswing also raises a governance challenge that the digital health sector hasn't fully grappled with: who decides how AI vulnerability-finding capabilities are used, and against whose systems?
Anthropic has made a deliberate choice to form a coalition of trusted partners and restrict access. But as they note in the announcement, capabilities like these are likely to proliferate; the question is whether defenders or attackers move faster.
For organisations responsible for healthcare data and clinical systems, the answer has to be to act now: audit your AI tooling, review your vulnerability management processes, and ensure your security posture reflects the new threat reality that Mythos Preview represents.
Project Glasswing is a signal, not just an announcement. It tells us that AI has crossed a threshold in cybersecurity capability that changes the risk calculus for every organisation that operates critical software, including every organisation that touches NHS systems or patient data.
The coalition bets that if defenders move first, the advantage can be sustained. That bet only pays off if organisations outside the coalition also move. The NHS and digital health sector need to be part of that response.